1 Global AIDS Epidemic The first AIDS case was diagnosed in 1981 20 years later, 20 million people are dead and 37.8 million people (range: 34.6–42.3 million)

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Presentation on theme: "1 Global AIDS Epidemic The first AIDS case was diagnosed in 1981 20 years later, 20 million people are dead and 37.8 million people (range: 34.6–42.3 million)"— Presentation transcript:

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1 Global AIDS Epidemic The first AIDS case was diagnosed in 1981 20 years later, 20 million people are dead and 37.8 million people (range: 34.6–42.3 million) worldwide are living with HIV. Many national leaders are still in denial about the impact of AIDS on their people and societies.

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2 Global AIDS Epidemic AIDS is expanding relentlessly, destroying people’s lives and in many cases seriously damaging the fabric of societies. The epidemic is also affecting young people disproportionately: 15–24-year-olds account for half of all new HIV infections worldwide; more than 6000 contract the virus every day.

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3 Global AIDS Epidemic … Women are more physically susceptible to HIV infection than men. Data from a number of studies suggest that male-to- female transmission during sex is about twice as likely to occur as female-to-male transmission, if no other sexually transmitted infections are present. Young women are biologically more susceptible to infection than older women before menopause.

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4 Global AIDS Epidemic … In most societies, the rules governing sexual relationships differ for women and men, with men holding most of the power. For many women, including married women, their male partners’ sexual behaviour is the most important HIV-risk factor.

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5 Global AIDS Epidemic … Their socially defined roles as carers, wives, mothers and grandmothers means they bear the greatest part of the AIDS-care burden. When death and illness lead to household or community impoverishment, women and girls are even more affected due to their low social status and lack of equal economic opportunities.

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6 Global AIDS Epidemic … Country data indicate that the number of people living with HIV continues to rise in all parts of the world despite the fact that effective prevention strategies exist.

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7 Global AIDS Epidemic … In many high-income countries, sex between men plays an important role in the epidemic. In 2002, drug injection accounted for more than 10% of all reported HIV infections in Western Europe and was responsible for 25% of HIV infections in North America.

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8 Global increases, global inequality Increases in the percentage of HIV-infected women also appear to be rising in: North America (25% in 2003, compared to 20% in 2001) Oceania (19% in 2003, compared to 17% in 2001) Latin America (36% in 2003, compared to 35% in 2001) The Caribbean (49% in 2003, compared to 48% in 2001) Eastern Europe and Central Asia (33% in 2003, compared to 32% in 2001). While it is difficult to compare all the regional factors causing this increase, it is clear that gender inequalities— especially the rules governing sexual relationships for women and men—are at the heart of the matter.

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10 Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Saharan Africa remains the hardest-hit region with extremely high HIV prevalence among pregnant women aged 15–24 reported in a number of countries. Nowhere is the epidemic’s ‘feminization’ more apparent than in sub-Saharan Africa, where 57% of adults infected are women, and 75% of young people infected are women and girls.

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12 Sub-Saharan Africa … As the total adult population is growing, the number of people living with HIV is increasing, with the result that adult prevalence has remained stable in recent years (see Graph). However, this overall stabilization of prevalence in the sub-Saharan region conceals important regional variations.

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15 Sub-Saharan Africa … Many African countries are experiencing generalized epidemics. This means that HIV is spreading throughout the general population, rather than being confined to populations at higher risk, such as sex workers and their clients, men who have sex with men, and injecting drug users.

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16 Sub-Saharan Africa … Several social factors are driving this trend. Young African women tend to have male partners much older than themselves—partners who are more likely than young men to be HIV-infected. Gender inequalities in the region make it much more difficult for African women to negotiate condom use.

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17 Sub-Saharan Africa … Furthermore, sexual violence, which damages tissues and increases the risk of HIV transmission, is widespread, particularly in the context of violent conflict. In countries where the general population’s prevalence is high and women’s social status is low, the risk of HIV infection through sexual violence is high.

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18 Sub-Saharan Africa … In Soweto, South Africa, found significantly higher rates of HIV infection and found in women who were physically abused, sexually assaulted or dominated by their male partners. The study also produced evidence that abusive men are more likely than non-abusers to be HIV-positive (Dunkle et al., 2004).

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19 ASIA In Asia, the HIV epidemic remains largely concentrated in injecting drug users, men who have sex with men, sex workers, clients of sex workers and their immediate sexual partners. Effective prevention programming coverage in these populations is inadequate. Diverse epidemics are under way in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Injecting drug use is the main driving force behind epidemics across the region.

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20 Asia … Similar factors are threatening women in South and South-East Asia, but the overall impact in the region is much lower because the epidemic in most countries is concentrated among injecting drug users and other key populations. At the end of 2003, women accounted for 28% of infections, a slight increase compared to end-2001 estimates.

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21 Asia … Congruence between indicators of women’s poor status and their HIV vulnerability suggests a close link between patriarchy and HIV in South Asia. Women typically have limited access to reproductive health services and are often ignorant about HIV, the ways in which it can spread and prevention options. Social and cultural norms often prevent them from insisting on prevention methods such as use of condoms in their relations with their husbands.

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22 Asia … An estimated 7.4 million people in Asia are living with HIV. Around half a million are believed to have died of AIDS in 2003, and about twice as many—1.1 million are thought to have become newly infected with HIV.

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23 Asia … China and India: large epidemics Epidemics in this region remain largely concentrated among injecting drug users, men who have sex with men, sex workers, clients of sex workers and their sexual partners.